Malcolm Young, AC/DC Guitarist and Co-Founder, Dead at 64

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RIP Malcolm.

Malcolm Young, AC/DC Guitarist and Co-Founder, Dead at 64

Rolling Stone
Daniel Kreps 4 hrs ago


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(Video via People)
Malcolm Young, guitarist and co-founder of AC/DC, died Saturday at the age of 64. Young had been suffering with dementia for the past three years, an illness that forced his retirement from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame-inducted band he founded with his brother Angus Young in 1973.

"Today it is with deep heartfelt sadness that AC/DC has to announce the passing of Malcolm Young," AC/DC wrote in a statement.
"Malcolm, along with Angus, was the founder and creator of AC/DC. With enormous dedication and commitment he was the driving force behind the band. As a guitarist, songwriter and visionary he was a perfectionist and a unique man. He always stuck to his guns and did and said exactly what he wanted. He took great pride in all that he endeavored. His loyalty to the fans was unsurpassed."

© Martyn Goodacre Hulton Archive Malcolm Young, guitarist and co-founder of AC/DC, died Saturday at the age of 64 after a battle with dementia. Angus Young added, "As his brother it is hard to express in words what he has meant to me during my life, the bond we had was unique and very special. He leaves behind an enormous legacy that will live on forever. Malcolm, job well done."
The Young brothers lost their older brother George Young, the Easybeats guitarist and AC/DC's longtime producer, in October at the age of 70.
In an additional statement from Malcolm Young's family, the band said that Malcolm Young died peacefully Saturday with his family by his side.
"Renowned for his musical prowess, Malcolm was a songwriter, guitarist, performer, producer and visionary who inspired many," the statement said. "From the outset, he knew what he wanted to achieve and, along with his younger brother, took to the world stage giving their all at every show. Nothing less would do for their fans."

As rhythm guitarist for the legendary rock band, Malcolm Young served as an indispensable foil to Angus Young's arena-stuffing riffs. After forming AC/DC in 1973, the Young brothers would be credited as co-writers on every song the band recorded from their 1975 debut High Voltage through 2014's Rock or Bust. That final album marked AC/DC's first without Malcolm, who announced in September 2014 that he would permanently leave the band due to dementia.
"We miss Malcolm, obviously," AC/DC singer Brian Johnson said in July 2014. "He's a fighter. He's in [the] hospital, but he's a fighter. We've got our fingers crossed that he'll get strong again... Stevie, Malcolm's nephew, was magnificent, but when you're recording with this thing hanging over you and your work mate isn't well, it's difficult. But I'm sure [Malcolm] was rooting for us."
Malcolm Young last performed live with AC/DC when their tour for 2008's Black Ice concluded in June 2010 with a concert in Bilbao, Spain.
Malcolm Young, like his older brother George and younger brother Angus, was born in Glasgow, Scotland before the whole Young family emigrated to Sydney, Australia in the early Sixties.
Malcolm and Angus' first brush with rock stardom came courtesy of their brother George, who found global fame thanks to his band the Easybeats and their song "Friday on My Mind." Although Malcolm's two older brothers found success in the music industry, their father still made Malcolm work as a mechanic in a bra factory after leaving school at 15.

"I've never felt like a pop star – this is a nine-to-five sort of gig," Malcolm told Rolling Stone in 2008. "It comes from working in the factories, that world. You don't forget it."
In 1973, Malcolm recruited Angus to form a new band, which the brothers named after the "AC/DC" electrical current marker they spotted on their sister's sewing machine. After a few lineup changes, the Young brothers were introduced to singer Bon Scott by their brother George, who would serve as AC/DC's producer on their early albums, including their debut High Voltage in 1975.
Throughout AC/DC's tenure, Malcolm and Angus Young served as the band's main creative force, crafting the unmistakable riffs that would make AC/DC globally one of the biggest bands in music. Together, the brothers would create the music for hits like "Back in Black," "Hells Bells," "Highway to Hell," "Thunderstruck," "For Those About to Rock (We Salute You)," "You Shook Me All Night Long" and dozens more rock staples.

However, Malcolm's time in AC/DC was not without strife: A heavy drinker, he briefly left AC/DC in 1988 during the Blow Up Your Video Tour – his only absence from the band up to and until his dementia diagnosis – to go to rehab to curb his drinking problem. After a few months, Malcolm returned to the band and remained sober ever since. "I was not surprised," George Young said his younger brother's sobriety. "When Malcolm puts his mind to something, he does it."
In the 2008 Rolling Stone profile on AC/DC, the Young brothers were asked "Who runs AC/DC?" "We both do, because we were there from the start," Malcolm replied. The Young brothers and AC/DC were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003. With over 110 million albums sold, AC/DC is also the best-selling Australian act of all time.
Megadeth's Dave Mustaine, who regarded Malcolm as one of rock's greatest rhythm guitarists, tweeted Saturday following Young's death, "I have to go...I am losing it that Malcolm is gone. I hate this..."

The Young brothers and AC/DC were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003. With over 110 million albums sold, AC/DC is also the best-selling Australian act of all time.
When Rolling Stone asked the Young brothers in 2008, Who runs AC/DC?," Malcolm replied, "We both do, because we were there from the start."
 

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On a Highway to Hell for sure.

RIP Malcolm.

Glad I got to see him twice live.

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DC

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RIP to one of the best! That band was essential music for lifting weights in the weight room in high school and for bonfire parites out in the desert in the 90s! Tucson will miss you!
 

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My favorite teams
  1. Chicago Bulls
I learned to play guitar on a 59 jet firebird. When I was a kid building amps (the part I was actually good at), I'd always make sure any project head could recreate that AC/DC sound as close to possible just using whatever far off design I built from my own concepts.

Fast forward a bit. I met an engineer/tech in the 90s who does a some big name gear producing and mixing for a lot of known recordings because I was contracted to build something tedious. I really don't know all the names behind the scenes, it just happened at the time I had a website advertising my services in a wildly different internet landscape.

I had a question about the design that he couldn't answer, he makes a phone call and puts Phil Rudd on speaker to explain better. I honestly didn't know who he was that day either, but then when he wanted to finalize a bit of the configuration he calls Malcolm over, all he says is something along the lines of, "If you can't figure it out between this or that, then put both in, give us a switch and everyone's happy". He hung up, the question had nothing to do with anything we were talking about. I was on some kind of high, because I knew who was on the phone at that point and basically just did whatever anyways. Never found out if they liked it or used it, but the engineer loved it. That's my AC/DC story. If it wasn't for a neighbor passing away and none of the neighbors wanting a bulky guitar that wasn't a gibson or fender, I might never have had this gretsch jet firebird. Never decided to try to learn how to play, fail and decide I like the tech side more. I definitely would not do the work I do, if I didn't find out as a kid, this old-man guitar was actually the same one used in AC/DC. Otherwise that weird guitar that I saw would have gone straight to the attic in a day, like any naive kid.

RIP, thank you. 64 is just too soon. Wish I knew if that power board and socket conditioner concept ever made it anywhere. And I'll still maintain that every other AC/DC song sounds the same.
 

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RIP Malcolm. We Salute You!
 

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